June 19, 2013

Horse Racing Recap: Racing Aptitude wins feature at Del Mar

69adba0d038ec22790b1483d0aa1be97 Horse Racing Recap: Racing Aptitude wins feature at Del Mar

DEL MAR, Calif. (AP) – Aptitude led all the way to win the $78,000 feature by a half-length at Del Mar on Thursday, giving jockey Martin Garcia his third win on the card.

Garcia won the second race aboard Bubba Fizz for his 1,000th and won the seventh race aboard Royal Encounter.

Racing Aptitude ran 1 1/16 miles on the turf in 1:40.18 and paid $17, $9 and $6.40 for .

Red Sun returned $7 and $4.60, while Thirtyfirststreet was another half-length back in third and paid $6.80 to show. Lucky Primo, the 8-5 favorite, was fourth.

Garcia, a 27-year-old from Mexico, won his first race on Aug. 17, 2005, at Bay Meadows in Northern California. In 2006, he finished second in the ’ standings at Del Mar.


Ky. governor sets rules for drugs in horse racing

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) – Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear on Thursday wielded his to implement regulations that would allow only government veterinarians to administer a race-day drug to horses and would lower allowable amounts of another medication given within days of races.

His action came days after the proposals appeared stymied because of objections from a group of .

In a letter explaining his decision, Beshear said it’s in the horse-racing industry’s interests to allow “these well-developed and fully vetted regulations” to take effect. He said the regulations are “at the heart” of efforts by state horse racing regulators to “protect the integrity of racing and the safety of all participants in racing, including the horses and the who ride them.”

These changes would apply only to races in Kentucky, such as at in Louisville, in Lexington and in . States set their own rules for horse racing, but the debate over regulations governing in the sport has recently reached Congress amid talk of whether is needed.

The new Kentucky regulations technically go into effect on Friday. But the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission will notify horse racing groups on Friday about when the changes will be implemented, according to commission spokesman Dick Brown.

The letter was sent to the state’s Legislative Research Committee along with some lawmakers and horse racing regulators.

The Democratic governor noted that the regulations are the result of more than a year of work by the Horse Racing Commission, which held nearly a dozen public meetings that included veterinarians, as well as horse trainers and owners.

The proposals had been found deficient earlier in the week by the Interim Joint Committee on Licensing and Occupations. The committee’s 19-1 vote cast doubt about the future of the regulations.

Beshear’s action quickly drew praise from state Sen. Damon Thayer. The Georgetown Republican said Thursday that the regulations will solidify Kentucky’s “role as a national leader when it comes to medication reform” in horse racing.

Thayer said the regulations will boost “the integrity of the sport” in a state that bills itself as the horse capital of the world. He said it will send a message that Kentucky racing is “becoming less reliant on these medications that have damaged the perception of the sport.”

Under one change, veterinarians employed by the Horse Racing Commission would be the only ones allowed to administer a drug to horses on days they are racing. The only race-drug that can be given to horses in Kentucky is furosemide, an anti-bleeding drug that’s marketed as Lasix and Salix.

The intent is to prevent horses from getting an unfair advantage in races by receiving performance-enhancement drugs.

Another change would be to set lower amounts of an anti-inflammatory drug that could be given to horses within days before they race.

Thayer said other states have implemented similar regulations.

Kentucky lawmakers could try to overturn the regulations, Thayer said, but he hopes that by then it won’t be an issue.

“It’s my hope that by next year’s legislative session, that those in opposition to this will see that it’s a very reasonable reform and that there’s no need to overturn the regulation by passing a law,” he said.

The disagreement could be a prelude to a review of another proposed horse-racing regulation that triggered an even more heated debate when it was approved by the horse racing commission earlier this year.

Lawmakers will review a regulation that would phase in a ban on the race-day use of furosemide in graded or listed stakes races.

Under the proposed regulation, the race-day ban on furosemide would begin with 2-year-old horses in 2014. It would apply to 2- and 3-year-old horses competing in those stakes races in 2015, meaning it would include that year’s Kentucky Derby.

In 2016, the ban would apply to any horse entered to race in graded or listed stakes races in Kentucky.

Graded or listed stakes races command the biggest prize money and attract the upper-echelon horses.

Balance the Books wins at Saratoga

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) – Balance the Books rallied to beat front-running Joha by a head Thursday in the Grade 2, $200,000 With Anticipation for 2-year-olds at Saratoga Race Course.

Ridden by Julien Leparoux, Balance the Books ran 1 1/16 miles on the turf course in 1:42.30, and paid $10.80, $6 and $3.40 for his first victory in two career starts.

Trainer Chad Brown said the Grade 1, $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf at Santa Anita on Nov. 3 would be a likely target for Balance the Books.

Joha returned $5.30 and $3, and Charming Kitten paid $2.90 to show.

Horse Racing Recap: Racing Aptitude wins feature at Del Mar is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NASCAR: Atlanta could be last hope for Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards

b26dd9e1a5af82d72af57b943f832a3d NASCAR: Atlanta could be last hope for Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards
, driver of the #11 Toyota, and Jeff Gordon, driver of the #24 FarmVille/Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet, race side by side during the NASCAR Series Night Race at on August 25, 2012 in Bristol, Tennessee.
(August 24, 2012 – Source: Tyler Barrick/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / ) is a shrine of Sprint Cup firsts for Jeff Gordon and , but the 1.5-mile track might represent their last stands for a 2012 title.

Both NASCAR stars are outside the Chase for the Sprint Cup wild-card hunt with two races remaining until the title run, and Sunday’s 500 could be a make-or-break opportunity.

Gordon, who made the first start of his career in NASCAR’s premier series at Atlanta in the 1992 , has a win this season, and the Aug. 5 triumph at propelled the Hendrick Motorsports driver into the provisional No. 2 wild-card slot.

VIDEO: Take a virtual lap at Atlanta with Jeff Gordon
MORE: NASCAR, tracks examining pit design
STANDINGS: Sprint Cup points

The four- slumped to consecutive finishes outside the top 20 at and before rebounding with a third last week at .

He still trails Kyle Busch by 16 points for the final wild card, but a victory would leap-frog him into that spot.

“I think we have to win,” Gordon said. “I feel like we’re right back to where we were before Pocono. We pretty much have to win because I don’t know if we could gain those points back.”

Atlanta offers plenty of hope for the race’s defending winner. Gordon also has a driver rating of 104.1 (ranking second in the series to teammate Jimmie Johnson) and five of the 11 victories at Atlanta for Hendrick Motorsports (the team’s next win would match Wood Brothers Racing’s track record).

But he will need to adapt to new conditions. Last year’s Atlanta victory came on a (after the Sunday night race was delayed by bad weather), and it’s unlikely the same setup would work again even if this year’s 500-mile event weren’t under the lights.

“I feel like the cars have evolved since last year,” Gordon said. “It’s whether we can incorporate some of those engineering ideas into that track. I feel like we are going to be very competitive.”

If Gordon or another one-win wild-card hopeful scores a victory at Atlanta, Edwards’ Chase bid virtually is sunk. After finishing runner-up in the 2011 points standings (losing the title on a tiebreaker to Tony Stewart), Edwards is winless this season. Though he has only two top-fives, he has managed a 12th-place ranking in the points behind Kasey Kahne, who has a vise-grip on a wild card with two wins.

Because the wild cards are awarded to the winningest drivers ranked 11th through 20th, Edwards would be locked out if there are a pair of two-win eligible candidates heading into the Sept. 9 race at Richmond International Raceway. Richmond also could be a trouble spot for Gordon, who hasn’t won on the 0.75-mile track in 11 years and finished 23rd there in April.

Edwards has led only five races this season but is sanguine about Atlanta, where the Roush Fenway Racing driver outdueled Johnson for his inaugural victory in Cup in 2005.

“I don’t think there’s a more fun racetrack on the circuit,” said Edwards, who has three wins on the oval and was fifth a year ago. “We feel like we’ve got a car that can go win that race, so we’re really excited.”

In a season dotted by visits to repaved and reconfigured racetracks (including Bristol, Michigan and Pocono recently and Kansas Speedway ahead in October), Atlanta remains a throwback with an abrasive and choppy surface that hasn’t been altered in 15 years.

After a half-century of twice-annual races, this will be the second consecutive season that NASCAR is making one stop at the track in Atlanta’s south suburbs, and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ryan Newman said that might make it tougher getting acclimated to a 1.5-mile oval that produces more tire wear than perhaps any other circuit on the schedule.

“It’s bumpy enough that those bumps can spit you right out,” said Newman, another one-win wild-card candidate who is three points behind Gordon. “Getting into Turn 1 and the middle of (turns) 3 and 4, you’ve got (to) catch everything just right. It’s kind of like surfing or wake boarding; you’ve got to catch the waves right and put the car in the right spot.”

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NHL proposals to change revenue formula would be significant

ea343bf33d6a60a257abdb355e5260da NHL proposals to change revenue formula would be significant
NHL forward , seen talking to reporters in July in New York, has expressed frustration with how revenue is being calculated. (Jason DeCrow/Associated Press)

(PhatzRadio / ) — When the NHL made its most recent proposal to the players on , indicated it included a revenue split starting at 51.6 per cent to 48.4 in favour of the , eventually moving towards a 50-50 split over the course of the deal.

Upon further review, the players argued that changes to Related Revenue actually decreased their share to 46 per cent under current rules. later confirmed this.

forward told The Vancouver Province’s Ben Kuzma: “It would be nice to have a standard set of rules and know exactly what we’re calculating from.”

What were those changes? Apparently, there were four:

1) In the existing CBA, teams can deduct the cost of doing business from . But there are limits. For example, deductions from or “special games” such as European openers, “shall not in the aggregate exceed fifteen (15) per cent per League Year on a League-wide basis” of the revenues. You can find all of the examples, if you wish, in Article 50 of the current document. The NHL is arguing that costs far exceed these caps.

2) One area of the NHL cannot deduct ANY costs from is sales (e.g., paying people to sell them). Everything must be thrown into the pot. Mistake, oversight, whatever – the league would like a re-do.

3) Lightning owner spent $35 million US last summer to upgrade The Tampa Bay Times Forum. Meanwhile, Rangers owner committed an estimated $977 million to a massive renovation of the . (Say what you want about Dolan, but doing that without public funding is extremely impressive.) As it stands, teams receive no financial credit for that. The league would like that changed. The model is probably the latest CBA, which allows the league the option of taking 1.5 per cent from the NFLPA’s 47 per cent share to build new stadiums. Larger revenues from newer buildings, the reasoning goes, benefits the players, too.

4) When players on one-way deals like Wade Redden or Jeff Finger are sent to the minors, their salaries no longer count. Not only is the NHL trying to eliminate this loophole from the salary-cap portion of the discussion, it is trying to make those contracts tied to HRR, too.

Obviously, all of this stuff is negotiable. Just because you demand it doesn’t mean you get it.

But this should give an indication of what’s being asked. The potential changes are significant.

It’s going to be interesting to see the NHL’s reaction to the NHLPA’s next proposal, which may be delivered Friday.

On Wednesday, agent Anton Thun told the radio show Prime Time Sports that he saw Oct. 11 – the scheduled start of the season – as a more important date than Sept. 15, when the CBA expires.

It seemed innocuous because Thun, unlike most, was generally positive and optimistic. Csnphilly.com’s Tim Panaccio wrote on Thursday that three agents told him something similar. Some league and team executives didn’t like that message, because it threatens lucrative (at least in some markets) pre-season games, and indicates their deadline isn’t being taken seriously. Players are not paid for exhibition games, but still get 57 per cent of the revenues under the current CBA.

For his part, Thun said it was his own opinion and not any kind of NHLPA/agent messaging.

But it makes sense: Oct. 11 is a true pressure point for both sides. But I found the reaction interesting, because it illustrates the tension bubbling under the surface.

If the important games get missed, do the NHL’s offers get worse?

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NFL motions to have thousands of concussion suits dismissed

355c0ad60a5d54792087cc975bc8839e NFL motions to have thousands of concussion suits dismissed

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – The moved Thursday to try to shut down lawsuits filed by thousands of former players who say they suffered or fear suffering permanent from -related concussions, calling the issue a “” that should be resolved not by courts but by terms of the .

The players accuse the NFL of negligence and say concealed known medical links between concussions and brain injuries, leading many of them to suffer from or Alzheimer’s disease, or be at an increased risk of reckless or suicidal behavior.

In a motion to dismiss the suits filed late Thursday, the NFL argues that the covers safety and health rules — while delegating to each team decisions about a player’s condition and when they should return to play. And the league said the suits lack any specific proof of concealment.

“To the extent that plaintiffs have a claim addressing injuries incurred during their NFL careers, that claim may only proceed pursuant to the grievance procedures set forth in the CBAs,” the motion said.

About 140 NFL lawsuits have been consolidated in federal court in Philadelphia before U.S. Anita B. Brody. Unless Brody agrees to dismiss them early on, or an umbrella settlement is reached, she will likely decide what evidence can be used at trial, whether a class can be certified for medical monitoring and other pretrial issues. The cases might then return to their home district for trial.

According to an analysis, 3,377 players have sued the NFL, charging that not enough was done to inform them of the dangers of concussions in the past, or to take care of them today. That tally includes at least 26 . There are 5,249 total plaintiffs, including spouses, other relatives and .

The lead plaintiff in an early concussion lawsuit filed last year, former safety Ray , committed suicide in April at age 62. An autopsy found he had the degenerative brain disease CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy. His widow remains a plaintiff.

Other players have told The Associated Press that they were put back into games after devastating hits, and were fed painkillers by team doctors before games to mask their pain.

Tony Dorsett, the Heisman Trophy winner and former Dallas Cowboys star who played in the NFL from 1977-88, attributes his memory problems to the hits and concussions he suffered in his 12-year career, including one that knocked him out cold in a 1984 game against Philadelphia. He nevertheless returned to the field, he said.

“Did they know it was a concussion?” Dorsett, a plaintiff, asked rhetorically in an AP interview. “They thought I was half-dead.”

Doctors now say the regions of his brain that control organization and memory are not getting enough oxygen, Dorsett said.

The league said that at least two federal courts have agreed that the collective bargaining agreement dictates a player’s right to compensation for injuries, once in a suit involving the late Dave Duerson, who killed himself last year.

The Minnesota Supreme Court likewise refused to let the widow of Vikings lineman Korey Stringer pursue a wrongful death suit after he died of heatstroke following a 2001 practice, on grounds the claim was trumped by the collective bargaining agreement. Stringer’s wife later settled with the NFL over a negligence claim.

The league, meanwhile, insists that player safety has long been a priority.

“Any allegation that the NFL intentionally sought to mislead players has no merit. It stands in contrast to the league’s actions to better protect players and advance the science and medical understanding of the management and treatment of concussions,” the league said in a statement earlier this year.

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NBA: Lakers plan Kareem statue, jersey retirements for Shaq, Wilkes

5d435eba307c07c6b499a548c1d2e629 NBA: Lakers plan Kareem statue, jersey retirements for Shaq, Wilkes
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar speaks during a rehearsal before a taping of Jeopardy! Power Players Week at DAR Constitution Hall on April 21, 2012 in Washington, DC.
(April 20, 2012 – Source: Kris Connor/ South America)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The will unveil a statue of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and retire the jerseys of Shaquille O’Neal and during the upcoming season.

The Lakers confirmed the long-planned honors Thursday.

The statue of Abdul-Jabbar will be unveiled in ’s on Nov. 16, joining statues of Magic Johnson, and . The ’s career scoring leader won five of his six during 14 seasons in Los Angeles.

Wilkes’ No. 52 jersey will be retired on Dec. 28, and O’Neal’s No. 34 jersey will be retired on April 2.

Wilkes spent with the Lakers and was elected to the earlier this year.

O’Neal spent in Los Angeles from 1996-2004, winning three .

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Los Angeles Dodgers: Defending Adrian Gonzalez Trade with Potential TV Network

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adrian gonazlez 9 Los Angeles Dodgers: Defending Adrian Gonzalez Trade with Potential TV Network

The Dodgers have been criticized for the finances of the Adrian Gonzalez trade, but the investment will be profitable under a new television contract.

While the Dodgers added nearly $250 million in Boston salaries to take on in their recent acquisitions, the ownership could take in as much as $8.5 billion when their television contract expires with FOX Sports and KCAL at the end of the 2013 season. As much as some may speculate that this trade came from a fear of the Giants and their acquisition of outfielder Hunter Pence, the long-term speculation is that this is a move to increase the overall franchise value of the Los Angeles Dodgers with a profitable television contract.

When asked about a potential ‘spending limit’ after adding nearly half a billion dollars in salaries in the past month, the Dodgers were quick to explain their unique financial situation.

“I haven’t found it yet,” Dodgers President Stan Kasten told The Los Angeles Times. ”I’ll let you know when we get there.”

Perhaps the lack of hesitation to spend would be in part because they hope to replicate the success of the YES Network in Los Angeles. This is where the Yankees have generated much of their profit, and where they get the money to sign new marque ballplayers.

Arguably the best way to replicate that success is to put the most entertaining possible team on the field for fans to tune in to. With the addition of Ramirez, Victorino, Crawford, Beckett and Gonzalez, the Dodgers are starting to do exactly that. If the Dodgers feel comfortable spending that money to increase the value of their franchise, what should it matter to the fans?

In a recent column about Jeremy Lin, Grantland writer Jay Kaspian Kang made a very interesting observation that seems to parallel the philosophy of Dodgers ownership.

“We have no idea how much money Jim Dolan stands to lose and how that affects the Knicks’ future. And Knicks fans shouldn’t care,” Kang wrote. “They should just want the most entertaining, best product on the court. A team with Jeremy Lin is a better product for consumers than a team without Jeremy Lin. That should be 99 percent of every fan’s calculation.”

At its fundamental core, sports are a medium for entertainment. Like all businesses in the entertainment industry, generating revenue is just as important as it would be in the real estate industry. However, entertaining the fans is the ultimate goal for sports ownership.

What’s the single most entertaining thing that a sports franchise can do?

The answer to that is simple: spend enough money in a unique, game-changing way to maximize talent on the field. With an increased interest in the franchise in the region of Southern California comes an increased profit via ticket sales, merchandise and most importantly, a potentially lucrative television contract.

For those wondering how much money Dodgers chairman Mark Walter was talking about when he told the Los Angeles Times that the team could “still take on significant money” in the future, it’s safe to say that it’s quite a bit.

“The Dodgers could start their own regional sports network. In this scenario, they would essentially “sell” the rights to themselves and compete with their jilted suitors. The team would control production, ad and sponsor sales integration, team-related support programming and distribution of its product,” wrote Ed Desser in the Hollywood Reporter.

“Because of the wide range of potential distribution outcomes, we estimate average annual revenue from as little as $125 million to as much as $425 million. Over 20 years, if everything were to go very well, this could be worth $8.5 billion, including rights, profits and equity value.”

Desser’s piece was published weeks before the Gonzalez trade went through, forcing us to believe that the Dodgers could very well see a number similar to what he predicted.

The Dodgers move is being felt around the league.

“I think the motivation for that deal, to be completely honest with you, it’s that [upcoming Dodgers] TV deal,” Southern California born star Ryan Braun told MLB.com. “That’s going to be a monster TV deal. That’s why the Angels signed Albert [Pujols], and [the Dodgers' deal] is going to be bigger than we’ve ever seen. It’s going to be a crazy influx of cash.”

In the scheme of things, Braun brings up a good point when looking at the price that an elite first baseman costs in this generation.

Prince Fielder costs the Tigers $214 over nine years, Joey Votto costs the Reds $250 million over ten years, and Albert Pujols costs the Angels $240 over ten years which came from a spending spree inspired by a $2 billion TV deal.

When put into that context, the Dodgers are essentially paying$262.5 million over fourteen total player years to elite first baseman Gonzalez & Co. rather than overpaying for potential signees Adam LaRoche or Kevin Youkilis.

So while Los Angeles may start the 2013 season with an estimated $192.6 million in contract obligations ($73.5 million more than the New York Yankees), Desser estimatesthat the Dodgers could see up to $425 million a year in television revenue under a new network contract. Ultimately, the Dodgers would still end up in the green from the estimated television rights alone.

Even if the Dodgers don’t start their own network, there will be plenty interested in the newly profitable team including Fox Sports, KCAL and Time Warner Cable (from the same company as Turner Sports, the same company that recently acquired a 5-year, $25 billion television contract with the Los Angeles Lakers as well as a recent purchase of Bleacher Report in the last month) that would all likely pay upwards of a billion dollars for the rights to show the Dodgers on television.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, Fox Sports will have an exclusive 45-day negotiating period with the Dodgers for a renewed television contract that begins on October 15thReuters.com reports that preliminary talks with Fox Sports have already began.

The move came in part from a desire to win now, as the Dodgers are 2.0 GB of the San Francisco Giants in the NL West with 34 games left to play. The more drastic motivation for the recent moves, however, came from an increased interest in making the upcoming television deal as profitable as possible.

“Quite simply, the Dodgers roster moves are designed not just to boost on-field performance but also the team’s market value as a television asset,” said Forbes writer Patrick Rishe. “This Dodger team now feels like can’t miss TV with the stars it has assembled.”

Bryan Kalbrosky is a Columnist for Bleacher Report and covers the New York Mets and Oregon Ducks. The Los Angeles writer is also a passionate SoCal sports junkie and regularly attends games. He writes for the Trends N Topics Team at Bleacher Report and can be reached on Twitter. Be sure to follow him to see more of his thoughts, opinions and stories.

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US Open 2012: Kerber knocks off Venus in nearly 3-hour match

b077f0537aa80f8c9e5d11c89ca66e82 US Open 2012: Kerber knocks off Venus in nearly 3 hour match
of the United States speaks to the media during a press conference announcing his retirement during Day Four of the 2012 US Open at USTA on August 30, 2012 in the Flushing neighborhood of the of New York City.
(August 29, 2012 – Source: Michael Heiman/Getty Images North America)

NEW YORK (AP) — At a U.S. Open that will be remembered for goodbyes by and , another former No. 1 and , Venus Williams, left with a spirited second-round loss that felt nothing like a farewell.

Hours after Roddick chose the occasion of his to let the in on a little secret he’d been keeping — he’ll retire after his run at Flushing Meadows ends — Williams served poorly and stumbled badly for a set and a half before recovering to make things quite competitive.

Williams came within two points of winning, but dropped five of the last and ended up exiting early at a tournament she’s won twice, beaten 6-2, 5-7, 7-5 by sixth-seeded of Germany in a nearly 3-hour match that ended at 12:19 a.m. as Thursday turned to Friday.

Asked afterward if she’s ready to join Roddick in retirement, Williams replied: “No, because if I could have made two more shots, I probably could have won that match. I think there’s a big difference for me because I’m beating myself. I’m not getting destroyed out there. … If I was out there and people were killing me, maybe it’s time to hang it up.”

A year ago at the U.S. Open, Williams didn’t get the chance to play at all in the second round, withdrawing hours before the match and announcing she had Sjogren’s syndrome, an that can cause fatigue.

This time, buoyed by chants of “Let’s go, Venus!” in a mostly empty — perhaps spectators figured in the second set that Kerber was on her way to a swift victory – Williams found the resolve and energy to put aside her 16 double-faults and 60 total unforced errors and help produce as entertaining a contest as the arena has hosted this week.

“I know this is not proper etiquette, but this is the first time I’ve ever played here that the crowd has been behind me like that. Today I felt American, you know, for the first time at the U.S. Open,” Williams said. “So I’ve waited my whole career to have this moment and here it is.”

At changeovers in the third set, trying to concentrate on her coach’s game plan, Kerber draped a white towel over her head, looking a bit like a little kid dressing as a ghost for Halloween. She would lift the towel’s edge every so often so she could tuck a water bottle underneath and take a sip.

“Venus is such a great player. … Everybody was against me,” Kerber said, referring to the crowd, “but it doesn’t matter.”

It all came a day after four-time major champion Clijsters, who is 29, played the final singles match of her career, and while the 32-year-old Williams never has uttered a word indicating she’s thinking about leaving the sport, she is no longer the player she once was.

“Obviously, being on the losing end of a match like this isn’t a lot of fun,” Williams said. “Today all I had was fight, because I didn’t play well.”

In addition to her 2000 and 2001 trophies from the U.S. Open, and five titles from Wimbledon, Williams was the runner-up at major tournaments seven times. In 16 years of Grand Slam action, since her debut in 1997, Williams had never gone through an entire season without making at least one fourth-round appearance at a major.

Until 2012, when she never even made the third round once. She missed the Australian Open while still working her way back onto the tour, then lost in the second round at the French Open and the first round at Wimbledon.

For so long the owner of one of the most feared serves on the women’s tour — surpassed only, perhaps, by her younger sister Serena’s – Williams took quite a while to get going against Kerber, who was a semifinalist in New York last year. Williams was broken each of the first five times she served and nine times overall.

“It’s been a long time; I usually don’t have that many breaks,” Williams said.

She only hit one ace, more than 1 1/2 hours into the match, in her 10th service game of the evening.

Kerber reeled off six consecutive games in one stretch from the first set to the second, while Williams’ mother, Oracene Price, rested her chin on her right hand in the stands. Williams made things interesting, though.

“I was nervous at the end of the second set. I mean, I was a little bit nervous and playing also not so aggressive. I was too defensive,” Kerber said.

Then, after Williams led 4-2 in the third set, and was two points away from victory while leading 5-4 as Kerber served, it all came apart again down the stretch for the American.

Usually stoic during matches, whether winning or losing, Williams was as animated as she gets, raising a clenched fist or yelling “Come on!” after those rare instances when she did control the action – and dropping her head or rolling her eyes or even swiping her racket on the court after missed shots.

It was the left-handed Kerber’s tour-leading 55th match win of the year, and she even showed off a little ingenuity, twice shifting the racket to her right hand to extend exchanges. She even won one, somehow connecting with enough oomph righty to get the ball over to the other side. Williams, perhaps stunned the point wasn’t over, pushed a swinging backhand volley into the net while staggering forward.

That kind of night for Williams, who even had issues with an earring that came out of her right lobe and the wrapping on her racket handle, which she replaced during a changeover.

Her U.S. Open is over, and Roddick’s career will be whenever his last match of this tournament ends.

He made his surprising announcement at a hastily arranged news conference at the site of his biggest triumph – the 2003 championship, the last time an American man won a Grand Slam singles trophy.

“I just feel like it’s time,” said Roddick, who is seeded 20th. “I don’t know that I’m healthy enough or committed enough to go another year. I’ve always wanted to, in a perfect world, finish at this event. I have a lot of family and friends here. I’ve thought all year that I would know when I got to this tournament. When I was playing my first round, I knew.”

He is scheduled to play 19-year-old Bernard Tomic of Australia in the second round Friday night.

Roddick’s impending departure overshadowed some otherwise noteworthy on-court developments Thursday afternoon.

There was the loss by fifth-seeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, the 2008 Australian Open runner-up, against a man ranked 52nd.

And there was a spate of victories by American men, two who are Roddick’s contemporaries and good pals (32-year-old James Blake and 30-year-old Mardy Fish), and two who have been viewed as possible successors as the best the country has to offer in the sport (19-year-old Jack Sock and 24-year-old Sam Querrey).

“I saw the press conference just before I came out here. I had a feeling, thought it might be, because he’s someone who puts heart and soul into every match. It gets tougher as you get older, and I don’t think he could keep doing it the same way,” said the 115th-ranked Blake, whose 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 upset of No. 24 Marcel Granollers of Spain was stunning for its ease.

No. 23-seeded Fish came back to beat two-time U.S. Open semifinalist Nikolay Davydenko 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-1, 6-2, the tournament-record 10th match in which a man erased a two-set deficit and came all the way back to win.

Davydenko’s takeaway?

Men should be playing best-of-three-set matches at Grand Slam tournaments, the way women do.

“Why [do] girls play best of three sets and we should play best of five sets and have the same prize money?” Davydenko said, reviving a familiar debate.

“Why are we playing five-set matches? We need to play best of three in Grand Slams. Everybody will support (that idea, even Roger) Federer. For Federer, it’s easy to win in one hour, two sets. No need to run (for) a third set,” Davydenko said.

Of course, for Federer, winning three sets before his opponent does never has been much of a problem, and the 17-time major champion moved into the third round with a routine 6-2, 6-3, 6-2 victory over 83rd-ranked Bjorn Phau of Germany on Thursday night.

Naturally, he was asked about Roddick, a guy Federer beat in all four Grand Slam finals they played against each other, including one at the U.S. Open and three at Wimbledon.

“Oh, man. He’s a great man,” Federer said. “I’ve had some great battles with him for a long, long time. Obviously, the Wimbledon finals come to mind, the ones we played together. He’s a great, great competitor and a great champion, really.”

Looking ahead to Friday, Federer also mentioned that he thinks Roddick “truly deserves a great ovation, a great atmosphere, a great crowd. … I’m definitely going to watch it. It’s not one to miss, and I hope it’s not his last.”

Querrey also echoed the sentiments of plenty of others about Roddick’s decision.

“He’s been my biggest role model the last 10 years, playing tennis, watching tennis. He’s been a really great guy, a great leader to us all. Nice and kind. Really generous to the up-and-comers,” Querrey said after beating Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo of Spain 6-3, 6-4, 6-3 to reach the third round. “For me, for … the 18-year-olds now, he’s just been an unbelievable champion, a Hall of Famer.”

While few seemed to have an inkling that Roddick would say farewell during these two weeks, 14-time major champion Serena Williams, for one, was not taken aback.

Indeed, after beating Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez of Spain 6-2, 6-4, the younger Williams said she knew this was coming.

“I mean, he told me a while ago — last year — that this would be it,” she said. “We were talking about it. I was just thinking, ‘Change your mind, Andy. Change your mind.’ But I guess he didn’t.”

US Open 2012: Kerber knocks off Venus in nearly 3-hour match is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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Utley to 3B? Not So Fast

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I understand everyone’s desire to try their best to extend the career of Chase Utley. I’ve heard the suggestions, like everyone else has, for the past couple of years. “Put him in the outfield.” “Try him at first.” Aside from the obvious 250 pound issue at first in Ryan Howard, some of the suggestions made some sense.

Yesterday, Utley was spotted by WIP’s Rob Ellis and Glen Macnow fielding grounders at third base. The story quickly caught fire and Utley was confronted prior to last night’s game. To his credit, the usually tight lipped Utley confessed. It was his idea and he approached Ruben Amaro Jr. wondering if it would be an option for the team. Since then it has been reported that Utley and Amaro also discussed the outfield as an option.

The pros of Utley being able to field 3B are pretty plain. Utley wouldn’t need quite the range as he would need at 2nd which means his knees would take less of a pounding. He also wouldn’t be in the line of opposing players sliding hard into second trying to take him out. Utley could also give you more of a prototypical power third baseman. I’m not saying Utley is a power hitter, but he’ll certainly give you more pop than you’ve gotten there from Placido Polanco. It would give the Phillies greater flexibility and it would also open up a spot for Freddy Galvis, who maby fans and the organization seem to be high on. But this move would not necessarily be all good, either.

For instance, Utley played some third base in minor leagues. In 80 games at the hot corner, Utley made a staggering 28 errors. Now I’ll grant you that Utley is an experienced major leaguer now and probably a much more capable fielder, but that’s a lot of errors. The bottom line is that we’ve seen struggle at times with his throws from second base, how do you expect him to be able to deliver the ball all the way across the diamond with zip and precision?

Chase Utley is a true professional. I have little doubt that if Utley applied himself and worked hard over the long offseason ahead that he’d be able to field third base well. I’m just not sure that he has the arm strength to make the throws. If he can put it together, it could be a great step toward stabilizing the middle of the infield and prolonging the beloved infielder’s career. If he can’t, he could be a defensive liability on a team that has taken huge steps backward defensively this year.

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The Rich Get Richer: The Failure Of Competitive Balance In Baseball

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In 2003, when baseball enacted the “Competitive Balance Tax”, the concept was that it would force large market teams to spend less. After all, there was nothing inherently fair about watching the New York Yankees have a payroll of $188 million, and the Kansas City Royals have a payroll of $39 million. When one team has all of the resources, there is no question which team a star player will play for. So the fans were told that this tax would even the playing field.

It was a wonderful lie.

Flash forward nine years, and the balance has not gotten better. As a matter of fact, there is an argument that it has gotten worse. The Yankees still have the highest payroll in baseball, and if any of the players that the picked up in the global blockbuster trade with the stay, they will be close behind. The and the of Anaheim would be right behind them. The Red Sox would be well over that limit as well, had they not just dumped $200 million in contracts on the Dodgers. Meanwhile, the have the lowest payroll, with just one sixth of what the Yankees have.

Why did the tax make things worse? If a team is forced to pay extra money to keep their payroll high, why are payrolls continuing to skyrocket? The answer is simple: the tax does not do nearly enough.

The Yankees yearly income is greater than any team in baseball by a wide margin, with a large amount of that coming from their YES network, which supplies an estimated $800 million in revenue to the Yankees every year. NESN gives a lower, but still large payout to the Red Sox, and a similar amount is expected for the Dodgers when their TV deal is finished next year. When you have an almost unlimited stream of revenue, paying a little extra to have a competitively superior team is well worth the cost.

 

The second reason is simple greed by the owners of small market teams, like the Royals, Astros, and Tampa Bay Rays. The tax gives them an effective excuse to why they do not raise payroll, allowing them to constantly stay low in the standings, draft top players, and effectively serve as a glorified farm system for the larger teams. The Royals were once referred to as the “quadruple A affiliate of the Oakland Athletics” for how many star players like Johnny Damon and Jermaine Dye would get traded to Oakland because the Royals could not (or in the eyes of the fans, would not) pay them market value.

The question gets asked when the topic of spending in baseball comes up: “the owners are all billionaires, why not spend some of that and catch up?” For the answer, all you need to do is look at a retail chain business. When a new owner picks it up, they might throw some of their own income into making it better, at least for a while. But the point of the business is not to please the customers, optimism or not. The point is to make the owner money, and if the owner has to pay stadium fees, league fees, all the other operating expenses of running a team, and then salaries on top of that, they still want to make money at the end of the day. Which means the only fluid cost, the salaries, get reduced so that the owners can continue to make money on his investment.

This creates a downward cycle of money. The fans do not want to spend their money to watch an inferior product. When the fans stop attending games, the owners make less money, thus forcing them to reduce salaries even further to keep their earnings in the black. The team then loses more good players, driving the fans even further away, and the cycle repeats.

The Players Association has long rejected the idea of a hard salary cap. The owners have long rejected the idea of a salary floor. Only with both will competitive balance truly return to baseball.

It will not happen. The players are getting paid, the owners are getting paid, and the fans are getting shafted. Just as the “Competitive Balance Tax” intended.

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Vin Scully – "BOBBLEHEAD NITE" – (long overdue)

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Passing out “Bobbleheads” to the first 20-25 thousand fans entering the ballpark is nothing new. What is “new” the “Bobblehead” is . Scully has broadcast Dodger games since 1950 and at age 84 still brings a level of drama to games that few can rival. Scully, as his friends call him, is a living “legend” of our time. He began his career in an era where television was just emerging and the vast majority of baseball fans relied on the radio. This required broadcasters to not simply announce balls, strikes, hits, and foul balls, but to create a powerful “visible” image that enabled fans to feel like they were watching the game. No one in MLB has done that better. Here’s how sports writer Randy Shaw described Sully’s broadcast style.

“Sully described the breeze, level of sun, and the mottled light facing the batter. He captured the anxiety of the crowd, facial tics of the pitcher, and the rootedness of the batter – all in between pitches. He was the baseball “Picasso” of his time, an artist who gave listeners as vivid a picture of the game as those in attendance. Scully has a sing-song rhythm to his voice that cannot be replicated in this era requiring homogenous sounding announcers.”

He made fans appreciate all players and loved Willie Mays and Willie McCovey even when their home runs beat the Dodgers. Vin Scully has brought millions great pleasure when they tuned in to Dodger games on their radios. Recently he announced he’ll be back to broadcast his 64th season next year. When asked how long he would continue – Scully noted in his typical fashion – “my mother lived to 97.”

Scully’s broadcast years have produced an unprecedented collection of baseball related quotations. Here’s a sampling.

“FORGET IT” – (his most popular home run call)

Andre Dawson has a bruised knee and is listed as day-to-day (pause) Aren’t we all? (1991)

“He’s (Tom Glavine) like a tailor,a little off here,a little off there & you’re done, take a
seat.”

“How good was Stan Musial? He was good enough to take your breath away.” (1989)

“It was typical of him (Ted Williams) to become a Marine Air Corps pilot and see action and almost get shot down. He was a remarkable American as well as a remarkable ballplayer. His passing so close to a national holiday seems part of a divine plan, so we can always remember him not only as a great player but also as a great patriot.”

“The Dodgers are such a .500 team that if there were a way to split a three-game series,
they’d find it.”(1990) – Vin Scully was “never” a “homer.”
When you think of Vin Scully you think of the Dodgers. He’s in Baseball’s .
Having a Vin Scully – “Bobblehead” nite, (tonight) is long overdue…………

Larry Upton
“Upton on Sports”-source:beyond.com/baseballalmanac/

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